LOVE, LOSS & THE STORM THAT SHAPED IT ALL | First Look
Two lovers. A storm tearing through the Danish coastline. This wasn’t a love story bathed in golden light—it was something heavier. The cold, the wind, the weight of it all—nothing was staged, everything was felt. The full story, unseen moments, and the choices behind them—inside.

Before We Begin
I know I just sent an email yesterday, but this one? This is different.
This isn’t just another story, another session. It’s the first time I’m pulling back the curtain completely.
For years, I’ve shared my work, my thoughts, and my process for free—because I believe in transparency and storytelling. That’s not changing. But I also want to go deeper.
This shoot wasn’t planned like this. Not exactly. I had an idea, a feeling. But then the storm came. And instead of resisting it, we leaned in.
And that changed everything.
This is the first look—the beginning of something much bigger. The full story, the behind-the-scenes breakdown, the choices that shaped this session—that’s all inside.
No pressure—if this speaks to you, I’d love for you to be part of it.
But first, let me show you how it started.

Two lovers. A storm ripping through the Danish coastline.
A love story that wasn’t about smiles and sunshine—but about something deeper. Something heavier.
Most people only think about love as warmth. As joy. As comfort.
But what about the kind of love that sits with you in the dark?
The kind that stays when the world feels too heavy to hold?
That’s what this shoot became.
The Setting: Wind, Salt & the Edge of the World
This happened just outside Lønstrup, Denmark. A place that felt like the end of the world—a graveyard on the edge of a cliff, the sea raging below, the sky thick with heavy, fast-moving clouds.
Chris (from Sturmsucht, who I ran the See.Feel.Create. workshop with) had scouted this location before. That morning, he showed it to me. The second I saw it, I knew.
This wasn’t a place for laughter.
This was a place where love meets loss.
Then I remembered—the couple had brought a black suit and a black dress.

It clicked.
I looked at them and said, “How do you feel about shooting something different? Not just love, but the weight of it?”
They said yes.
And just like that, we had a story.
The Storm That Changed Everything
By midday, the storm had fully arrived. Gusts hitting 70 km/h. Wind ripping through every layer of clothing. 6°C, but feeling like so much less.
Everything in this session—the wind, the cold, the raw discomfort—became part of the story.
They weren’t just playing a role. They were living it.

But Here’s What You Haven’t Seen Yet...
- The full slideshow—every frame, exactly as it was meant to be seen.
- The shots I left out—and why curation matters just as much as capturing.
- The behind-the-scenes breakdown—directing, editing, and the choices that shaped the final series.
👉 The full breakdown is now live—for paid members only.
Why I’m Offering Paid Content Now
For years, I’ve shared my work, my process, and my thoughts on storytelling for free—because I believe in transparency and in sharing what I love.
That’s not changing.
But I also want to go deeper.
This paid content isn’t just about putting things behind a paywall—it’s about giving you more. More behind-the-scenes insights. More unedited moments. More real, raw conversations about photography, storytelling, and creative process.
If you’ve ever wanted to see the full breakdown—my exact process, my directing prompts, my editing decisions, and the shots that didn’t make the final cut—this is for you.
This is the kind of content I wish I had access to when I was learning.
And if you’ve been following my work for a while and have found value in it—I’d love for you to be part of this next step.
👉 Subscribe now to get access. Let’s build something even deeper together.
One Last Thing
If you made it this far, thank you.
This isn’t just about sharing photos. It’s about sharing why they matter. And this post? This is just the beginning.
If you want to see more—the full slideshow, the frames I left out, the directing choices, the final edits—that’s all inside.
And if you’ve ever found something valuable in my work—something that made you see differently, feel something, or push your own creativity further—then this next step is for you.
I’d love for you to be part of it.
Either way, I appreciate you. Thanks for being here.
Hugs,
Bjørn